A teacher teaching her young students
Blog by Flexzo

What Are Flexible Teaching Jobs?

Published On: April 29, 2026

Flexible teaching jobs are not a single thing. The term covers a wide range of arrangements, from part-time permanent contracts to day-to-day supply work, job shares, fixed-term placements, and roles specifically designed around varied or reduced hours.

What they share is that they give education professionals more control over when, where, or how much they work. And demand for them is growing on both sides of the conversation.

According to government figures published in 2025, 46% of teachers had a flexible working arrangement in place in 2024, up six percentage points since 2022. At the same time, 47% of teaching staff considering leaving state education cited a lack of flexible working opportunities as a reason for doing so. That tension sits at the centre of why flexible teaching has become such an important topic.

The Main Types of Flexible Teaching Work

Flexible teaching takes several different forms, and the type you choose shapes your employment rights, income, and level of commitment.

The most common arrangements in UK education are:

  • Part-time teaching: a contracted proportion of the standard timetable, paid pro-rata at the appropriate STPCD pay point, with the same rights and entitlements as full-time staff

  • Supply teaching: short-term, day-to-day or longer placements with no commitment to a single setting, offering the most immediate form of flexibility

  • Fixed-term contracts: defined employment for a set period, often covering maternity or extended sick leave, with more protection than supply arrangements

  • Job sharing: two education professionals dividing the responsibilities of one full-time post, typically working two or three days each with agreed handover arrangements

  • Flexible hours within a permanent role: covering compressed hours, altered start and finish times, or PPA time taken off-site rather than on the premises

Our articles on full-time vs part-time teaching roles and short-term teaching contracts go into more detail on the specific rights and employment terms that apply to each arrangement.

Who Flexible Teaching Suits

Flexible teaching does not suit every education professional, and it does not suit the same person at every stage of a career. But it is a well-established route for a wide range of circumstances.

Education professionals who often find flexible work a good fit include:

  • Those with caring responsibilities for children, elderly relatives or others
  • Teachers returning from parental or extended sick leave who want to rebuild hours gradually
  • Experienced professionals approaching retirement who are not ready to stop entirely
  • ECTs and newly qualified teachers exploring different settings before committing permanently
  • Those combining teaching with other professional, creative or academic work
  • Education professionals managing a health condition that makes a full-time timetable difficult to sustain

None of these represent a lesser commitment to education. In many cases, flexible workers bring a clarity and focus to their contracted hours that sustained full-time workloads can make harder to maintain.

The Retention Argument

Flexible working has moved from a niche consideration to a workforce priority.

The DfE’s school workforce data shows that 8 in 10 teaching assistants and 6 in 10 administrative staff work part-time across state-funded schools in England. The pattern of flexible working in education is therefore already embedded at scale, particularly in support roles.

For qualified teachers, the picture has been slower to develop but is changing. The government has extended its Flexible Working Ambassadors Programme, which supports schools in building flexible working cultures, and has confirmed that PPA time can be taken remotely. The case being made is straightforward: retaining an experienced teacher in a part-time role is better for learners than losing them from the profession entirely.

82% of school leaders offering flexible working reported that it had helped retain teachers who might otherwise have left. That is a significant endorsement from within the system.

Pay and Rights in Flexible Teaching Roles

The legal protections for flexible and part-time workers in education are robust. Part-time teachers in maintained schools are paid pro-rata to the STPCD, with access to the same pay progression, TLR payments, CPD, and pension contributions as full-time colleagues.

The National Education Union’s guidance on supply staff is worth reading alongside this, particularly for those doing supply alongside or instead of a permanent arrangement. It covers pension access, holiday pay entitlements, and the Agency Workers Regulations, which entitle agency supply teachers to equal pay with directly employed teachers after 12 weeks in the same role.

The key distinction remains between being employed directly by a setting and being placed through an agency. Direct employment brings STPCD alignment and Teachers’ Pension Scheme access from day one. Agency supply does not, unless the 12-week threshold has been met.

Flexible Teaching and Career Progression

A common concern is whether flexible or part-time working limits career development. In maintained schools, it should not.

Part-time teachers are entitled to pay progression on the same basis as full-time colleagues. They can hold TLR responsibilities and receive proportionate payment and non-contact time for them. They cannot be excluded from training or CPD because of their working pattern.

That said, some leadership pathways can be harder to access in a part-time or supply arrangement simply because they require a sustained presence in a setting. Supply work, by its nature, does not provide the continuity that senior leadership development typically demands. This is a practical consideration rather than a legal barrier.

Finding Flexible Roles

Flexible teaching roles can be harder to find through standard job listings, which tend to default to full-time. Dedicated searches, direct applications to settings, and platforms specifically designed around flexible working all improve the chances of finding something that genuinely fits.

Flexzo Teach connects education professionals directly with settings across all role types, phases, and provision sectors, including part-time placements, supply work, and longer flexible arrangements. You set your availability and rate expectations, and settings contact you directly with no agency intermediary.

You can explore the full range of what the platform offers on the platform features page before registering.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. You have the right to make a flexible working request, and since April 2024 you can make two such requests in any 12-month period from day one of employment. Your employer must respond within two months.

Yes. Supply and flexible placements exist across primary, secondary, SEND, alternative provision, further education, and early years settings. Demand varies by region and specialisation, but the range of options is broad.

For teaching roles in maintained schools, yes. For support roles such as teaching assistant or cover supervisor, QTS is not required, and many of these roles are available on a flexible or part-time basis.

Get in Touch

If you have questions about flexible teaching roles or want to understand how Flexzo Teach can support your next placement, the team is happy to help.

Visit our contact page or register as an educator to get started.

Flexzo Teach: A Collaborative Staff Bank

Flexzo Teach is a collaborative staff bank connecting education professionals directly with settings across short-term, long-term, part-time, and permanent roles.

Built by Healsgood with compliance and safeguarding built in from the ground up, the platform removes the agency intermediary and gives education professionals direct control over their working arrangements.

You can explore the for educators section or find out more about the platform before registering.